Energy Is The Capacity of Matter To Perform Work As The Result
Potential energy is stored energy that a system possesses due to the position of its components. Examples include stretched springs, raised objects above the ground, and charged batteries. Kinetic energy is the energy of motion and depends on an object's mass and velocity. The total mechanical energy in a system, the sum of its potential and kinetic energy, remains constant according to the law of conservation of energy. Power refers to the rate at which work is done or energy is transferred, measured in units such as watts or horsepower.
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Energy Is The Capacity of Matter To Perform Work As The Result
Potential energy is stored energy that a system possesses due to the position of its components. Examples include stretched springs, raised objects above the ground, and charged batteries. Kinetic energy is the energy of motion and depends on an object's mass and velocity. The total mechanical energy in a system, the sum of its potential and kinetic energy, remains constant according to the law of conservation of energy. Power refers to the rate at which work is done or energy is transferred, measured in units such as watts or horsepower.
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Energy is the capacity of matter to perform work as the result possesses.
sesses. Other examples of systems having potential energy include
of its motion or its position in relation to forces acting on it. Energy a stretched rubber band, and a pair of magnets held together so that the associated with motion is known as kinetic energy, and energy related like poles are touching. to position is called potential energy. Thus, a swinging pendulum has Work is needed to give a system potential energy. It takes maximum potential energy at the terminal points; at all intermediate effort to lift a ball off the ground, stretch a rubber band, or force two positions it has both kinetic and potential energy in varying magnets together. In fact, the amount of potential energy a system proportions. Energy exists in various forms, including mechanical, possesses is equal to the work done on the system. Potential energy thermal, chemical, electrical, radiant, and atomic. All forms of energy also can be transformed into other forms of energy. For example, when are interconvertible by appropriate processes. In the process of a ball is held above the ground and released, the potential energy is transformation either kinetic or potential energy may be lost or gained, transformed into kinetic energy. but the sum total of the two remains always the same. Potential energy manifests itself in different ways. For A weight suspended from a cord has potential energy due to its example, electrically charged objects have potential energy as a result position, inasmuch as it can perform work in the process of falling. An of their position in an electric field. An explosive substance has electric battery has potential energy in chemical form. A piece of chemical potential energy that is transformed into heat, light, and magnesium has potential energy stored in chemical form that is kinetic energy when detonated. Nuclei in atoms have potential energy expended in the form of heat and light if the magnesium is ignited. If a that is transformed into more useful forms of energy in nuclear power gun is fired, the potential energy of the gunpowder is transformed into plants. the kinetic energy of the moving projectile. The kinetic mechanical Kinetic Energy is the energy possessed by an object, resulting energy of the moving rotor of a dynamo is changed into kinetic from the motion of that object. The magnitude of the kinetic energy electrical energy by electromagnetic induction. All forms of energy depends on both the mass and the velocity of the object according to tend to be transformed into heat, which is the most transient form of the equation energy. In mechanical devices energy not expended in useful work is E = mv2 dissipated in frictional heat, and losses in electrical circuits are largely heat losses. Where m is the mass of the object and v2 is its velocity Empirical observation in the 19th century led to the conclusion multiplied by itself. The value of E can also be derived from the that although energy can be transformed, it cannot be created or equation destroyed. This concept, known as the conservation of energy, E = (ma) d constitutes one of the basic principles of classical mechanics. The Where a is the acceleration applied to the mass, m, and d is the principle, along with the parallel principle of conservation of matter, distance through which a acts. The relationships between kinetic and holds true only for phenomena involving velocities that are small potential energy and among the concepts of force, distance, compared with the velocity of light. At higher velocities close to that acceleration, and energy can be illustrated by the lifting and dropping of light, as in nuclear reactions, energy and matter are interconvertible. of an object. In modern physics the two concepts, the conservation of energy and of When the object is lifted from a surface a vertical force is mass, are thus unified. applied to the object. As this force acts through a distance, energy is Potential Energy, stored energy possessed by a system as a transferred to the object. The energy associated with an object held result of the relative positions of the components of that system. For above a surface is termed potential energy. If the object is dropped, the example, if a ball is held above the ground, the system comprising the potential energy is converted to kinetic energy. ball and the earth has a certain amount of potential energy; lifting the Power, in physics and engineering, the rate of performing ball higher increases the amount of potential energy the system work or transferring energy. Work is equal to the force applied to move an object multiplied by the distance the object travels. Power measures how quickly the work is done. For example, suppose a person wants to push a heavy box across a room. To overcome the friction between the bottom of the box and the floor, the person must apply force to the box to keep it moving. Since friction is independent of an object's velocity along a sliding surface, no matter how quickly the person pushes the box across the floor, the force applied is the same. Now suppose the person pushes the box from one end of the room to the other in ten seconds, then pushes the box back to its original position in five seconds. In each trip across the room, the force applied and the distance the box is moved is the same, so the work done in each case is the same. But the second time the box is pushed across the room, the person has to apply more power than in the first trip because the same amount of work is done in five seconds rather than ten. Mathematically speaking, power is equal to the work done divided by the time interval over which the work is performed. The concept of power does not apply only to situations where objects are moved around mechanically. For example, the concept of power is also useful when dealing with electricity. Imagine an electric circuit with a resistor. A certain amount of work must be done to move charge through the resistor. To move charge more quickly through the resistor—or, in other words, to increase the current flowing through the resistor—more power is required. Power is always expressed in units of energy divided by units of time. Two units of power are the horsepower and the watt. One horsepower is equal to the amount of power required to lift 33,000 pounds a distance of 1 foot in 1 minute. One watt equals the power needed to do 1 joule of work per second. There are 746 watts in 1 horsepower.
(Encyclopedia of Energy Series) Robert U Ayres, Robert Costanza, Jose Goldemberg, Marija D Ilic, Eberhard Jochem, Robert Kaufmann, Amory B Lovins, Mohan Munasinghe, R K Pachauri, Claudia Sheinbaum Par (1).pdf